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Marc Faber States Gold Far From Bubble Phase
The
Gold Report
With more than
40 years as an economist to his credit and claiming gold as the
"biggest position in my life," Gloom Boom & Doom
Report Publisher Marc Faber assures us that gold is nowhere
near a bubble phase, but cautions that corrections of 40% are not
unusual in a bull market. At the end of March, Faber will share
his secrets for surviving corrections at the World MoneyShow in
Vancouver. In advance of that appearance, he sat down with The
Gold Report for this exclusive interview where he discusses
his bias for portfolio diversification in terms of geographies as
well as asset classes.
The Gold
Report: After Standard & Poor's (S&P) downgraded
a cluster of Eurozone countries in January, you came out saying
that downgrades should have been even deeper, depending on the country's
credit-worthiness. S&P did give below-investment-grade ratings
to Portugal and Cyprus BB and BB+, respectively but
you indicated that some of these countries warrant CCC ratings.
Do you anticipate additional downgrades?
Marc Faber:
If you accounted for the unfunded liabilities of most European
countries, as well as the U.S., the quality of the government debt
would be significantly lower. In other words, yes, I do expect to
see more and more downgrades over time.
TGR: Could
that happen in 2012?
MF: Yes, and
some thereafter.
TGR: Have the
markets priced in further downgrades already or should we expect
a bigger impact in the next round?
MF: I don't
think the market has priced it in because the yield today on U.S.
10-year government bonds is 2%, and 3% on 30-year bonds. If the
market were priced properly based on the quality of these bonds,
the yields would be far higher.
TGR: Did yields
change much with these recent downgrades?
MF: Yes, particularly
in the U.S., where investors perceive U.S. government bonds as safe.
The U.S. will pay the interest as long as it can print money. But
suppose you buy a 10-year government bond that yields 2% and inflation
is perceived to be 57%. To what extent would investors still
buy these bonds? That question will arise one day.
TGR: You've
discussed investors leaving the European markets in favor of a "safe
haven" in the U.S. Would U.S. bonds continue with such low
yields with the European downgrades?
MF: For a while,
yes, but at some point people will wake up and realize that the
U.S. will default through a depreciating currency in other
words, through printing money or by not paying the interest
on the bonds. I don't think the U.S. will stop paying the interest,
but printing more money will weaken the currency and produce higher
inflation in consumer prices, asset prices and commodity prices.
So being in U.S. government bonds will result in losses to investors
through currency depreciation.
TGR: You've
pointed out that negative real interest rates force people to speculate,
which creates enormous market volatility. That seems to be happening
now, but apparently investors are keeping a great deal of money
on the sidelines as well. If that comes in, would it make the markets
even more volatile? Or would you say the smart money will stay on
the sidelines and the speculative money is in play already?
MF: I think
there is a lot of money on the sidelines. Some will stay there,
because people who don't trust the system anymore will just keep
it there. Some will be invested, but it may not go into equities.
It could go into some other asset class, perhaps hard currencies
such as gold and silver, or real estate, which is now relatively
inexpensive in the U.S.
As for volatility,
it increased sharply last year, but has diminished over the last
three-months. I expect we'll see increasingly very high volatility
in all asset classes in the next few years. The money in an environment
of negative real interest rates will flow. It might flow into fewer
and fewer stocks, or into fewer and fewer assets that could go ballistic
on the upside.
TGR: Which
asset classes would you expect on the speculative upside?
MF: We had
the NASDAQ bubble 12 years ago, the housing market bubble probably
five years ago, and I would say also a bubble in commodities in
20072008, when oil spiked to $147. What's next, I'm not so
sure. I could imagine some stocks, maybe some precious metals, in
a bubble stage not the entire market necessarily.
TGR: Could
you delineate characteristics of stocks that will appreciate versus
those that will stagnate or lose value?
MF: If we look
at the market, we have some stocks where the outlook is perceived
to be particularly bright, and then there are others for instance,
Eastman Kodak Company (EKDKQ:OTBPK) that are at the opposite
end of the spectrum. It depends on the fundamentals and the imagination
of investors. I wouldn't necessarily buy up, so I'm not saying it
will go down. Maybe it will go up further. But in general if you
buy the company with the largest market capitalization in the world
you're not going to make a lot of money.
TGR: What captures
the imagination of investors?
MF: Basically
mania fed by excessive liquidity, with more and more people convinced
that something is the Holy Grail. It was the NASDAQ in 2000, Asia
before 1997, housing from 2000 to 20062007, or more recently
China. Exactly what it is, I don't know. But when a market has been
strong, the media write about it and people are attracted to it.
Then some useless academics write books about why stocks, or real
estate, always go up, and so forth. The media again write that up,
and more people flow into that sector.
TGR: A couple
of weeks ago James Turk told us that he thinks the low price for
gold in 2012 was already established early in January. What makes
you think it will pull back?
MF: The big
rally into Sept. 6, 2011, took the gold price to $1,922/ounce (oz)
and then it dropped until the end of the year, touching $1,522/oz
on Dec. 29. It has rallied, and is now above $1,700 again, but I
don't think the correction is entirely over. Corrections of 40%
are nothing unusual in a bull market.
As an adviser,
my duty is to always inform people of investment risk. I'm not saying
I expect gold to collapse, but telling people the gold price will
go up leads them to leverage up and speculate. If the gold price
drops $50/oz, they're wiped out. All I'm saying is that, in my opinion,
the gold price correction is not yet entirely completed. I see significant
support around the $1,500/oz level, but it could drop lower. It
depends on global liquidity and on money printing by central banks.
We could have a big correction if global liquidity tightens or they
stop printing money.
TGR: Over what
timeframe are you looking at the correction?
MF: This year
the gold price may not exceed the $1,922/oz high that we reached
on Sept. 6. Maybe it will. I'm not a prophet. I'm just telling people
that I'm buying gold and holding it. I don't speculate in gold.
If you buy gold, you better understand that the price could always
move to the downside. If you don't understand that, don't invest
in gold or in anything.
TGR: Investment
show commentators have been talking about gold being in one of those
mania bubbles you described because it's been increasing for 1112
years. Do you agree?
MF: No, gold
is not in a bubble. It wasn't in a bubble in 1973, either, but it
still corrected by 40% then. I don't believe gold is anywhere near
a bubble phase. A bubble phase is characterized by the majority
of market participants being involved in a market space. I saw a
gold bubble in 19791980, when the whole world was dealing buying
and selling gold 24-hours a day, globally.
TGR: But not
since then?
MF: No. If
you went to an investment conference in 1989, 90% of the people
there would have told you they owned shares in Japanese companies.
In 2000, 90% of them would have said they owned NASDAQ shares. Only
about 5% of the participants at an investment conference today would
tell you they own gold. Very few people in this world own gold.
I don't believe
that we're in a bubble.
TGR: Should
people who aren't yet in gold or want to add to their position wait
for a correction?
MF: I have
argued for the last 12 years that investors should buy a little
bit of physical gold every month and put it aside without concerns
about corrections. If you don't own any gold, I would start buying
some right away, keeping in mind that it could go down.
For the last
40 years in my business I've seen people always lose money when
they put too much money into something and then it goes down. They
panic and sell, or they have a margin call to sell and lose
money. I own gold. It's my biggest position in my life. The possibility
of the gold price going down doesn't disturb me. Every bull market
has corrections.
TGR: What do
you think about silver as an alternative precious metal to hold?
MF: Gold and
silver will move in the same direction, up together or down together.
At times, silver will be stronger relative to gold, and at other
times gold will be stronger relative to silver. My friend Eric Sprott
thinks that silver will go ballistic. I don't know. I own gold.
TGR: You're
on record as recommending that investors maintain diversified portfolios,
with 20% to 30% each in gold, real estate, equities and cash. Focusing
on equities, as we've discussed, means tremendous volatility. What
are your thoughts? High value? Large cap? Dividends? Something more
speculative, perhaps gold mining shares?
MF: Because
I live in Asia, I am quite familiar with the Asian markets and economies.
I have a bias toward Asian equities, especially because I can find
deals in places such as Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore and Hong Kong stocks
that give me 47% dividend yields. With yields at those levels,
at least I'm paid to wait. Even if they're cut 5%, I'd still get
better cash flow than I would from, say, U.S. government bonds.
Consequently, I feel reasonably confident owning such shares.
Because I have
allocated only 25% of my portfolio to equities, if the markets were
to drop 50%, I would have funds elsewhere in my portfolio to buy
more equities. That's not a prediction for a 50% market decline;
it's just to say that I'm positioned in such a way that I could
put more money in equities through a) my cash flow, b) my income
and c) my cash position. And I do own some gold shares through stock
options, because I'm a director of several exploration companies.
TGR: Given
that you're satisfied to, in essence, being paid to wait with dividend-paying
stocks, do you consider yourself a buy-and-hold investor?
MF: With my
asset allocation of 25% in equities, I can afford to hold them.
If I had 100% in equities, I would be more inclined to take profits
from time to time.
TGR: Let's
get back to Asia for a moment. Headlines in the U.S. have focused
lately more on what's going on in Europe, with Asia basically relegated
to page 2. What's your perception of the markets and economies there?
MF: We don't
have recessions yet, although there have been slowdowns in economic
activity and some corporate profit disappointments. The big question
is whether we have a problem in six months to one year's time that
results from a meaningful slowdown or even a crash in the Chinese
economy. That may happen.
Second, it's
not everywhere, but in some cases I see bubbles in the real estate
market, as there are in everything that relates to luxury luxury
properties, paintings, collectibles, the luxury department stores
and shops, the Swiss watch companies. They're all doing very good
business. I think there's a bubble essentially in everything at
the high end of the market. That concerns me a little bit. It may
continue for another year or so but will not last forever, so I'm
relatively cautious.
Having said
that, lots of companies in Asia do not cater to the high-end consumers
but to the rising middle class. I believe they are reasonably well
positioned to weather even a recession.
TGR: If China's
bubble in those luxury goods and real estate bursts, would the Asian
markets go down in tandem?
MF: Yes, I
think so. Last year the Chinese markets by the way, also India grossly
underperformed the U.S., so maybe the market has already discounted
a Chinese slowdown to some extent. But because I happen to think
that it hasn't discounted the Chinese slowdown entirely, yes, I
think the markets are still vulnerable.
TGR: Are your
investments in the Asian markets focused on companies that are not
catering to the high-end, like food and items that the middle class
buys?
MF: Yes, I
have a mixed portfolio of both industrial and residential real estate,
healthcare companies, retailers, food companies, agricultural companies,
finance companies and banks. So, it's fairly broad.
TGR: Are those
financing companies and banks Asian-based or internationally based?
That sector is certainly out of favor in North America.
MF: I have
no Chinese banks, but I own banks in Singapore and Thailand and
finance companies in Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia. Actually,
I'm also positive about some financial stocks in Europe and America.
Simply because of the money printing, these financial institutions
are benefiting at the expense of honest people who have savings
that yield nothing while their cost of living is progressing at
510% per annum.
I took a taxi
the other day from New Jersey to Manhattan. The Lincoln Tunnel has
raised its toll by 50%, from $8 to $12. But the government, brainwashed
by incompetent academics at the Federal Reserve, will tell you that
inflation is 2%.
TGR: You mentioned
liking finance companies in Europe and America because of money
printing. How does that benefit them?
MF: I don't
like them. In investing, it's not a question whether you like or
dislike something. It's a question of price. The best company or
the worst sector may be overvalued at one price and undervalued
at another. I happen to think that having weakened to around the
2009 lows last fall, when the S&P dropped to 1,074 on Oct. 4,
the financial sector was very cheap. Since then, there have been
big rallies for Citigroup Inc. (C:NYSE), Bank of America Corp. (BAC:NYSE)
and other banks. I saw opportunities there, but with the market
rallying so much, I believe it is now overbought and due for a correction.
We will see whether it's just a correction or a resumption of a
downtrend.
TGR: Which
do you think it will be?
MF: I don't
know. We haven't seen a correction yet. I think it's about to start.
Then we will have to see the shape of the correction, which could
last a month. After that, we'll have to look at the shape of the
recovery the number of stocks that will participate, the number
of new highs and so forth.
TGR: You've
indicated that your portfolio allocation includes real estate. Do
you consider real estate a good value in North America now?
MF:
I travel around the world all the time and I'm interested in the
formation of prices so I have an idea about trends in prices. You
have to consider real estate prices in the context of currency valuations.
For example, five years ago, homes in Australia and Canada were
inexpensive and now they aren't, but not necessarily because prices
have gone up. Although prices don't necessarily track with whether
a currency increases or decreases in value, in those two cases,
the value of the currencies also has increased.
The U.S. does
have areas where real estate is incredibly low relative to other
parts of the world. I can buy homes in Atlanta and Phoenix for less
than I'd pay in Thailand, and because the GDP per capita in the
U.S. is of course much higher than in Thailand, on a relative basis,
those homes in Atlanta and Phoenix would be attractive.
As a foreigner,
I am not interested in investing in U.S. real estate for various
reasons, including taxation, management and regulation. But if I
were a U.S. citizen, I would say now is a relatively good time to
buy real estate and rent it out and net a yield of maybe 68%.
Many of my friends who own rental apartments do very well on rental
income. Many of the people who no longer qualify for mortgages can
rent.
TGR: In terms
of asset diversification, to what extent ought the average U.S.
investor focus on international equities or real estate?
MF: I think
U.S. citizens should focus very much on diversifying their assets
internationally. Only Americans still believe that America remains
the most important economy in the world. Everybody else knows it
has become relatively less significant over the last five years.
Everybody, including Americans, should be global investors, and
Americans should have at least 50% of their money outside the U.S.
I would argue that a global investor should have maximum 40% in
Europe and in the U.S., with the rest in Asia, Latin America, Africa,
etc.
It's very difficult
for Americans to open bank accounts overseas, but buying real estate
overseas is one way to diversify, and that's not a problem. Maybe
the U.S. will close this loophole one day, but for now U.S. citizens
may buy real estate in South America, Europe or Asia anywhere
in the world. That's what I would do.
TGR: Do you
consider investments in stocks that are based in international areas
part of the diversification?
MF: Basically
you want exposure to rapidly growing economies. This is best achieved
by buying companies that have large exposure in the emerging economies
rather than the U.S. and Europe. The Coca-Cola Company (KO:NYSE)
is a U.S. company but the bulk of its business comes from outside
the U.S.
TGR:
You're scheduled to speak at the World
MoneyShow, coming up in Vancouver March 2729. We understand
that in your presentation, entitled "The Causes and Investment
Implications of Dishonest Money," you'll be discussing unintended
consequences of large fiscal deficits and expansionary monetary
policies. Would you give us some highlights of what you plan to
cover?
MF: Basically
I will try to explain that instead of smoothing out the business
cycle, government interventions have created more economic and financial
volatility and have had very negative consequences for the U.S.
in particular. And as I pointed out earlier, these measures, such
as some of the fiscal and monetary measures we've talked about,
are based on erroneous economic sophism.
TGR: What do
you think people will learn from listening to your presentation?
MF: That in
this environment of money printing, cash and government bonds are
not very safe and that you have to navigate through different asset
classes. Under normal conditions, cash and government bonds are
essentially the safest investments not investments with the
highest returns, but the safest. That is not the case today.
TGR:
And we appreciate the pointers you've made about some of those different
asset classes. Thank you very much.
Swiss-born
Marc Faber, who at age 24 earned his Ph.D in economics from the
University of Zurich, has lived in Hong Kong nearly 40 years. He
worked in New York, Zurich and Hong Kong for White Weld & Co.,
an investment bank historically managed by Boston Brahmins until
its sale to Merrill Lynch in 1978. From 1978 to 1990, Faber served
as managing director of Drexel Burnham Lambert (HK), setting up
his own investment advisory and fund management firm, Marc Faber
Ltd. in mid-1990. His widely read monthly investment newsletter,
Gloom Boom & Doom Report, highlights unusual investment
opportunities. Faber is also the author of several books, including
Tomorrow's
Gold: Asia's Age of Discovery (2002), which spent several
weeks on Amazon's best-seller list and is being translated into
Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Thai and German. He also contributes
regularly to leading financial publications around the world. Much
also has been written about Faber. Nury Vittachi, one of Asia's
most popular writers and speakers, published Riding
the Millennial Storm: Marc Faber's Path to Profit in the Financial
Markets (1998). The Financial Times of London described
him as "something of an icon" and Fortune called him a
"congenital contrarian and shrewd Swiss investment advisor."
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March
5, 2012
Dr.
Marc Faber [send him
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Gold.
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